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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To not even bother sending my child to school?

217 replies

MotherOfSEN · 28/02/2026 20:36

DD is in Year 6 at a local primary school. She is neurodiverse (autistic and ADHD) academically capable with no EHCP. I have asked a couple of times about applying for an EHCP, but the school has said she needs very little support and therefore she is unlikely to get one. I appreciate I could apply for one myself, but I’d need some sort of reason, which I currently do not have. She doesn’t have friends as such, she sort of floats around with everyone and makes herself busy at school lunch times doing clubs or reading. She has started to find Year 6 trickier, with the expectations and the work load, as well as preparation for SATS. At home, she is little trouble, but does need to be repeatedly reminded about tasks eg putting clothes on the right way, washing hands etc. Her conversation skills also aren’t great; she mainly spends time reading, drawing or creating animations on her tablet.

Monday is secondary school allocation day. I don’t want her going to either of the local secondary schools. For context, I work in SEN and year after year I encounter many students who have had to leave these schools because the schools weren’t making reasonable adjustments, didn’t understand SEN, they were bullied etc. Many students describe the experience as traumatic and it takes a long time for them to recover.

I am very concerned about bullying and the busyness of the environment. She struggles to follow instructions and I think she will get lost in big classes, navigating a large school, the sheer amount of pupils (both over 1,000). She gets overwhelmed in stressful environments and other people need to be sensitive to this. She gets mortified when being told off by a teacher, or even if a teacher shouts and tells the class off, she is an absolute people pleaser.

When I spoke to her current teacher, they expressed that they didn’t think either secondary school would be ideal for her. Equally, the tutor she has to support her schoolwork also feels the local schools would be detrimental for her. Several extended family members that I have discussed this with feel that a large comprehensive would not be the correct choice.

I’m at the point of just thinking ‘sod it’ and home educating her. We have a fair amount of local home education groups and I would employ tutors for various subjects. I work flexibly so I can easily accommodate this for her.

My main barrier is her father who thinks she should at least try the local schools. He thinks she should go and then we remove her if she’s struggling. I think that would be an error as she is very compliant and sensitive, she would feel as though she has failed at school or should keep going until breaking point. I want to remove this issue altogether. My opinion is that it may be possible for her to rejoin school, perhaps in Year 9 or Year 10, maybe at that point we could fund private school for her or she will be older and more suited / capable for the big secondaries.

For context, her father only sees her every other weekend and has very little input into her life in any meaningful way. He has never even been to her primary school, so I don’t think his opinion is informed at all if I’m honest.

WIBU to just home educate her and not even try with the local schools?

OP posts:
Lmnop22 · 28/02/2026 20:40

I think you’re underestimating how difficult and isolating home schooling would be. If she doesn’t need many adjustments at her current school, I would give her a chance at the local school and see if she thrives there before considering just sacking school off all together!

CatherinedeBourgh · 28/02/2026 20:48

Why would home schooling be difficult or isolating if there is a vibrant home ed community where the OP lives?

I think your dd is old enough to have an open discussion with you and take a joint decision, with the knowledge that it could be modified at a later date.

I home ed both of mine right the way through, btw. The door to going to school was always open if they wanted it.

MotherOfSEN · 28/02/2026 20:49

Lmnop22 · 28/02/2026 20:40

I think you’re underestimating how difficult and isolating home schooling would be. If she doesn’t need many adjustments at her current school, I would give her a chance at the local school and see if she thrives there before considering just sacking school off all together!

Why would it be difficult and isolating? I work in this space. She doesn’t have friends in the traditional sense at school, she spends her lunch times reading or going to clubs - the same thing she’d be doing if I home educated her.

OP posts:
YouFW · 28/02/2026 20:54

From real life experience with a girl who sounds just like yours, I would trust your instincts. It is most definitely a case of 'Mum knows best' here given the amount of caring you do for your daughter and how familiar you are working in SEND.

My girl had a breakdown after 1 term at a really supportive secondary school. She is still in recovery many years later. It traumatised her and I am on my knees from years and years of supporting her to recover. Trying to cope in mainstream broke both of us.

Home Ed your daughter.

BiteSizeByzantine · 28/02/2026 20:56

Why on Earth do people think homeschooling is isolating? You dont stay at home on your own everyday just because its called that.

Confuserr · 28/02/2026 20:57

She sounds like a pretty average child tbh. I don't think it's unusual to dislike being shouted at, or being in stressful environments.

You can decide that she shouldn't even try going to school. If she's not great socially it's not likely to get better if she's at home for a few years rather than making new friends. She'll have to work one day, she might need to be in situations which aren't 100% tailored to her comfort. Give her a chance, she might surprise you.

Needlenardlenoo · 28/02/2026 20:57

I think your reasoning is sound, although I also think a subject access request to the primary school would reveal plenty of evidence for an ECHNA request, and I will post a link to the EHCP support thread in case that's useful.

Tommingon · 28/02/2026 20:59

Would you be planning on giving up work to home educate or leaving her home whilst you work?

YouFW · 28/02/2026 20:59

I mean, it was so awful that she was rocking back and forth in the classroom in front of her peers and she didn't care.

My partner and I had to tag team one hour on, one hour off for about 18 hours a day for six weeks taking care of her. After 1 hour, we were so utterly exhausted that we needed the other one to take over.

She stopped eating. I had to spoon feed her while she lay in bed. She was like a little bird, opening her mouth whenever I put the spoon to her face.

I honestly don't know how we got through it. It was so bloody awful seeing her so broken.

ExistingonCoffee · 28/02/2026 21:00

Needlenardlenoo · 28/02/2026 20:57

I think your reasoning is sound, although I also think a subject access request to the primary school would reveal plenty of evidence for an ECHNA request, and I will post a link to the EHCP support thread in case that's useful.

I agree with @Needlenardlenoo.

I would request an EHCNA. Your reason is the transition to secondary. I would make the request whether you EHE or not. That way, even if you EHE, the EHCP is there should DD return to school/college at a later date.

MotherOfSEN · 28/02/2026 21:01

Tommingon · 28/02/2026 20:59

Would you be planning on giving up work to home educate or leaving her home whilst you work?

I run my own business remotely so it won’t be an issue.

OP posts:
MotherOfSEN · 28/02/2026 21:03

ExistingonCoffee · 28/02/2026 21:00

I agree with @Needlenardlenoo.

I would request an EHCNA. Your reason is the transition to secondary. I would make the request whether you EHE or not. That way, even if you EHE, the EHCP is there should DD return to school/college at a later date.

Isn’t it too late given she only has 5 months left of primary school?

OP posts:
MotherOfSEN · 28/02/2026 21:03

YouFW · 28/02/2026 20:59

I mean, it was so awful that she was rocking back and forth in the classroom in front of her peers and she didn't care.

My partner and I had to tag team one hour on, one hour off for about 18 hours a day for six weeks taking care of her. After 1 hour, we were so utterly exhausted that we needed the other one to take over.

She stopped eating. I had to spoon feed her while she lay in bed. She was like a little bird, opening her mouth whenever I put the spoon to her face.

I honestly don't know how we got through it. It was so bloody awful seeing her so broken.

I am so sorry.

OP posts:
Pricesandvices · 28/02/2026 21:04

I can absolutely see where you're coming from. My DD's secondary was a car crash, she missed almost 50% in the end. But they did get her an ehcp which meant she passed GCSE's and has hit the ground running at college. But we had self harm and literal carnage at home for years 8,9 and 10. DD was not in a fit state to attend school at all.

It's very hard. Primary schools know that a struggling child won't be their problem in a few months so they wash their hands of an ehcp.

ExistingonCoffee · 28/02/2026 21:07

No, it isn’t too late. The EHCP process is governed by statutory timescales. 20 weeks (there are some limited exceptions) but there is still time. You won’t have a finalised EHCP if you have to appeal, and many do, but even if you have to appeal, it is still worth it.

Lmnop22 · 28/02/2026 21:07

MotherOfSEN · 28/02/2026 20:49

Why would it be difficult and isolating? I work in this space. She doesn’t have friends in the traditional sense at school, she spends her lunch times reading or going to clubs - the same thing she’d be doing if I home educated her.

Just because you would have to dedicate yourself to her education full time which is a lot and with tutors privately would be expensive. She wouldn’t have people around her to be friends with at home if she did open up to developing friendships soon.

I’m not saying don’t do it at all, but I would give her a chance at mainstream because sometimes the change of scenery stimulates friendships and changes you wouldn’t expect and, if she didn’t need much support at her current school, maybe the poor SEN reputation of the secondary schools wouldn’t actually encompass her situation where support isn’t huge.

Lmnop22 · 28/02/2026 21:11

BiteSizeByzantine · 28/02/2026 20:56

Why on Earth do people think homeschooling is isolating? You dont stay at home on your own everyday just because its called that.

I’ve always assumed it would be because you’re not surrounded by a class of peers experiencing the same as you, not invited to the class parties, the school discos, going to clubs after school with friends etc.

I get that maybe there are other children you arrange play dates with like family and friends’ children but it’s not the same as experiencing the same experiences together for a 40 hour week

everypageisempty · 28/02/2026 21:12

You work in SEN and don't know how to apply for an EHCP without the school taking the lead? Really?

hockityponktas · 28/02/2026 21:17

Your DD sounds very much like mine was. She struggled hugely once she got to secondary. Basically had a breakdown and then years of MH issues. Trust your instincts. My now adult DD is seriously traumatised from the her experiences and I wish I had known more before she started at secondary school. The system is not built for these girls.

MotherOfSEN · 28/02/2026 21:18

everypageisempty · 28/02/2026 21:12

You work in SEN and don't know how to apply for an EHCP without the school taking the lead? Really?

That is not what I said at all. The school have said she does not need one, she doesn’t require support beyond what they can already offer in the classroom. I do not have issues with her at home beyond minor repetitions of instructions and being aware of her becoming overwhelmed, her conversation skills not being brilliant as she’s introverted, but this doesn’t limit her ability to communicate or limit her daily life. You need reasons to apply for an EHCP, current, real struggles. Not just being concerned for the future.

I understand I can bypass the school and apply for one, but I’d likely be rejected as my reasons would be ‘worried for the future that hasn’t happened yet as I know my DD.’

OP posts:
Sometimeswinning · 28/02/2026 21:19

Socialising isn’t an issue. Dd will miss assembly’s school trips etc. I love education. I may pull my dd at secondary school because I’m seeing the mess coming up!

YouFW · 28/02/2026 21:19

Lmnop22 · 28/02/2026 21:11

I’ve always assumed it would be because you’re not surrounded by a class of peers experiencing the same as you, not invited to the class parties, the school discos, going to clubs after school with friends etc.

I get that maybe there are other children you arrange play dates with like family and friends’ children but it’s not the same as experiencing the same experiences together for a 40 hour week

I'm making an assumption that you don't have an autistic child.

Most autistic kids don't have friends in the same way as NT children. It just doesn't really work like that, well not in my experience.

MotherOfSEN · 28/02/2026 21:20

YouFW · 28/02/2026 21:19

I'm making an assumption that you don't have an autistic child.

Most autistic kids don't have friends in the same way as NT children. It just doesn't really work like that, well not in my experience.

This!

OP posts:
titchy · 28/02/2026 21:23

MotherOfSEN · 28/02/2026 21:18

That is not what I said at all. The school have said she does not need one, she doesn’t require support beyond what they can already offer in the classroom. I do not have issues with her at home beyond minor repetitions of instructions and being aware of her becoming overwhelmed, her conversation skills not being brilliant as she’s introverted, but this doesn’t limit her ability to communicate or limit her daily life. You need reasons to apply for an EHCP, current, real struggles. Not just being concerned for the future.

I understand I can bypass the school and apply for one, but I’d likely be rejected as my reasons would be ‘worried for the future that hasn’t happened yet as I know my DD.’

Have you found a school that could be suitable?

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